Sometimes to get remembered in history, you need a great publicist. This weekend marks the 147th anniversary of the Battle of Little Bighorn—also known as ‘Custer’s Last Stand’—a chapter in U.S.
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Extraordinary Heroism at the Little Bighorn
“The Sioux say this officer was the bravest man they had ever fought.” — Sioux Chief Red Horse, 1881. “History is not history unless it is the truth.” — Abraham Lincoln, 1856. We’ve all heard the ...
Red Horse, “Untitled from the Red Horse Pictographic Account of the Battle of the Little Bighorn” (1881), graphite, colored pencil, and ink (NAA MS 2367A, 08571100, National Anthropological Archives, ...
The wrath of President Grant -- Glorious war -- Chasing shadows on the plains -- Death along the Washita -- Battling Sioux in Yellowstone country -- Black Hills, red spirits -- Prelude to war -- First ...
HARDIN -- Lt. Col. George Custer and the battle he lost to American Indians 125 years ago generate more than just excitement in this small town each summer. They generate business. Big business.
HARDIN, Mont. - The annual re-enactment of Custer's Last Stand will be Friday through Sunday, June 21-23, in Hardin. Dusty Webb, founder of the Old West Living History Foundation, is executive ...
Lieutenant Colonel Custer and US Army troops shown with Lakota Sioux and Northern Cheyenne tribes on the Little Bighorn, Montana, battlefield, as rendered by illustrators. (Wikimedia Commons) By ...
In the 19th century, over 250,000 Native Americans lived in the Great Plains -- between the Mississippi and Rocky Mountains. After the Civil War, however, the U.S. government began to increasingly ...
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